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Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
- Messages
- 7,324
Greetings
I was told this today:
When light approaches the coldest temperature, which is not zero degress but negative 273 degrees celsius or negative 459 degress fahrenheit (termed "absolute zero"), it ceases to move. Nothing can ever be colder than absolute zero since it is the point at which particles stop moving completely. This stopping of light has not experimentally been verified, but scientists have succeeded in slowing light down quite a bit by approaching absolute zero.
I am informed that Light behaves differently sometimes wave and sometimes particle and that there is Light which can be seen and Light which is invisible.
Is it all still the same light even though different?
Can light be stopped from traveling?
Thank You
I was told this today:
When light approaches the coldest temperature, which is not zero degress but negative 273 degrees celsius or negative 459 degress fahrenheit (termed "absolute zero"), it ceases to move. Nothing can ever be colder than absolute zero since it is the point at which particles stop moving completely. This stopping of light has not experimentally been verified, but scientists have succeeded in slowing light down quite a bit by approaching absolute zero.
I am informed that Light behaves differently sometimes wave and sometimes particle and that there is Light which can be seen and Light which is invisible.
Is it all still the same light even though different?
Can light be stopped from traveling?
Thank You